Monthly Archives: September 2011

The Father Wound

“they have the father wound”
says the handsome minister
speaking of gangbanging boys
not yet out of their teens

“they have the father wound”
he says again to the interviewer
“fathers take off
or are in prison”

“the father wound”
he says it so gently
candles in soft focus 
behind his graying voice

the father
seemingly not wound tight
despite this knowledge
despite the war outside his church

“the father wound”
cut so deeply
that a sense of wonder
that the minister thinks he can suture it

rises in the listener
upon hearing the phrase 
as if he did not distrust
that collar already 

as if the gangbangers
off-camera were infants
waiting to be picked up
by their fathers’ hands

and cuddled into health
as if assisting them into a dream
would be enough
as if a dream itself would be enough

 


Bio

Born incorrect,
unexpected,
accident of timing
and of shame.
Made his name out of spite,
out of a steel memory
and a vineyard tongue.
As the name grew
he loved everything
less and less, little
by little, until brief recall
was all that remained.  Cut
and drank and smoked into
himself.  Farther and farther
behind he fell,
a remnant of the blaze
he saw in the mirror
once.  Someone said
they loved him, but
he licked his bones
clean of the words.   
He liked alone
more than together,
silent more than aloud,
and still he talked too much
and knew he talked too much
and made insane connections
among prosaic things.  Harder
and harder for others
to bear, he longed for
a stamp that said
“Worthy” and when 
he could no longer see
a reason for it, he tramped
away and in the forest
where he once had said
“I will be…this,” he knelt and 
carved, instead, “I was never”
on his last clean artery,
and so he pitifully 
passed into that truth
and was thus proven 
completely correct.


American

not a black day at all
but a red one
seeing through
my eyelids
as if into the sun
the hot wind in my bad hair
my fat over my belt
and every ignoble moment
of this filthy life
is a swollen sty burning
I’m keeping my eyes tight shut
and I see everything

God is the heavy ray on me
snake men the peeling skin
rat women the weeping blisters
I am burning as is the outside
and all I want to do is run
into the last wheatfield left in the world
and make famine complete
utterly perfect as it ends everything

hope is for the idiot
I have one idiotic hope
when all is ash
maybe something will crawl out
look around 
say

I can work with this


Methods

Guns smell too much like family and home
and the danger we know versus
the danger we don’t know.

Knives taste a little like
ionized air and the good ones
leave their taste in your mouth.

I can never recall how many
loops there are in an official
hangman’s noose, and that

has kept me alive as I
will not violate tradition
for speed in execution.

Pills are too unpredictable
for a man of my size.
How many is too many is therefore enough?

What I adore instead: the cigarette
alcohol drugs laziness fat fast food method.
Happy is the man who goes forward

in that pleasure. There is of course
stroke and slow decline as a possible
result, but I trust my impulsive body

to get the job done swiftly
when the time comes.  And I won’t
even know it’s coming.  I can pretend

it was inadvertent.  I can forego
stealing a gun from the folks.
I can just go with no immediate agency,

exactly as I have lived.


Icelandic Fiddle Music

Fiddling on the radio at 4 AM.  
Then a singer with an Icelandic accent, maybe.  
You’re lying in bed fully clothed.  
Tonight was a banquet you chose not to attend.
Hey everyone said community demands it but you weren’t buying.
You weren’t convinced there was value in community.

All these people coming through town.
They say they love you.
Not a one comes knocking for you.
You wanna see them you gotta get your butt up and see them.
Get to the banquet.  
The banquet you hate.

Icelandic fiddlers on a 5 AM radio show.
Kids these days.
Fully clothed and lying in bed.
Lying in beds without you.
Naked or clothed lying in bed liars.
That singer whose accent you can’t place.

You don’t want to tell anyone you’re dying do you?
You want them to figure it out for themselves.
You want to hear the words from their contrite mouths:

We missed you at the banquet and came to see you.
We didn’t know.
We’ll undress you now.
We’ll sit or lie with you all night.
We adore that old-time Icelandic fiddling and singing.
We adore you too.

You hate.
You fear.
You don’t go to banquets anymore.
Your teeth are disgusting.
Your teeth are falling out.
You are exactly as old as you feel:

as old as Iceland.
As old as a fiddle.
As old as a gaptoothed singer.
As old as the weird music of just before 6 AM.
Twice as old as some of these meddling kids.
As old as throwing them out into the street naked from the bed

where you are better off
fully clothed
and alone
listening
to this crap and

waiting for sleep.

 

 


Greener Grass

The shade
blesses the blocked sun
for making it so.

All the great white
knows of flying
is that it is beyond its reach
and yet looks
so much like its own swimming 
that on occasion,
it will dare to break surface
and make an attempt.

I am always
longing to be 
what I’m not, though I know
what I’m not
is nothing I’d be happy 
being:

the rock in the shoe
that defines comfort.
The misery
that sweetens living.
The lens that makes the grass
greener
over there.

 


You And Ivan Pavlov Are Now Friends

Bell?
Yes. Mouth water?
Yes.
Food? Yes…
yes?

Yes.

Screen changes?
Yes.  Red number under
“Notifications?” Yes.
Mouth water?  Yes.
On my status? Yes…
yes?

Yes?

Oh.

More vitirol this time?
Cute puppy pic this time?
Link to controversial article this time?
Yes.  Red number under
“Notifications?”  Yes.
Bigger number? Yes?
YES! More mouth water?
YES! More vitirol?
YES! YES! YES!

Feeling hungry?
Feeling
full of YES! YES! YES! 
like James Joyce?
Like a writer?
Like a person of interest?
Like sitting up?
Like rolling over?
Like fetch? 


War

Anywhere you go,
there’s a war.
Military presence
or no,
a war;
craters and
pus and rot or
sweet green fields,
a war;
occupation or 
liberation, ideology
or theology,
a war.  

All you need
for a war to exist
is someone
accepting the existence
of collateral damage —

and
dulling eyes
that no longer wonder
what to call
what just happened.


A Duende Project performance video for you…

Thought I’d take a break from posting poems to offer you this:  a video of my poetry and music collaborative effort, The Duende Project, at a tribute to Kurt Vonnegut Jr.  The event took place on September 22, 2011, in Somerville MA and featured a number of wonderful poets, including Charles Coe and Daphne Gottlieb among many other artists, writers, and musicians.

I posted the text of the poem a few days ago if you care to read it.

Hope you enjoy.

For Kurt, On the Other Side, Mowing The Lawn 


Never Stop Improving

is the motto 
for a warehouse store
selling lumber and spackle and lights
handyman that you are
you are always paying attention:
it’s time to go to work

rebuilding the shelves
in the bedroom
rebuilding the bedroom itself 
then improving the kiss
the response to the kiss
the response to the response to the kiss

let’s get to work
let’s improve something
this is all
too linear
too many
logical steps

let’s get to work
gapping the frame
inserting the chipped marble
stenciling eagles on the mantels
rotating the architecture
around the range of solutions

let’s improve something
settling the ape
into the new cornerstone
suspending the dove above
charming the octopus into singing
finishing the pain threshhold

never stop improving
long pauses
short breaths
driving of angel nails
let’s get to work
housewarming

 


Let Words Small You

If you can,
let words
small you.  Let
a derangement of our language
bring you to folding
in.  Let wings
furl, legs curl,
the fetal charm
take hold.  If you can,
be born in this
again —

not as if you were in thrall
to that new God
made in books,
but free within loose embrace
of an older One
who dwells
between possibility
and its enactment,

that place where all
is always ready to be born
and never comes into
a defined life.


Fruit

Born small and sweet,
turned bad apple
at maturity
after being fed

daily rage,
a gas that left me slimy
upon evaporation;
shame,
a ferilizer too strong for any soil;
guilt, 
that infected water.

I might have been a good fruit
in a different climate.
I might have been
nutritious.  Now,
I’m a flavoring, a bitter
bit to puzzle on: did that whisper
of ugly
add or detract from the otherwise
good meal?

Don’t think I deserved this,
but it’s not for me to say.
Perhaps I did.  
Perhaps I was born in the right orchard.
Perhaps I was meant to sicken another.

All I know is all I’ve ever known:
how I grew, how I turned,
how I might have otherwise grown.

 


For Kurt, On The Other Side, Mowing The Lawn

This is a Duende Project piece written for “Everything Was Beautiful And Nothing Hurt,”  a multidisciplinary performance tribute for Kurt Vonnegut Jr. that was performed on September 22nd, 2011 in the lovely Precinct Bar in Somerville, MA.  Everything from shadow puppetry, music, and cabaret and the poetic talents of Jade Sylvan, Daphne Gottlieb, Meghan Chiampa, Charles Coe, James Caroline, Simone Beaubien, and The Duende Project (which would be Tony Brown on poetry and Steve Lanning-Cafaro on electric bass).  At some point, there will be audio of the piece available and perhaps video too.  

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

FOR KURT, ON THE OTHER SIDE, MOWING THE LAWN

“My epitaph in any case?  ‘Everything was beautiful.  Nothing hurt.’  I will have gotten off so light, whatever the heck it was that was going on.”  

— from the preface to “God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian.”

1.
I know deep down that
whatever’s in the stars
doesn’t care about us.

All our stuff
about gods and heaven
was invented
to help us forget that.

The best of us
are born to take it farther.
Can make whole worlds fit
into a little toe,
spin paradise from firestorms,
mythologize their way
into stability.

For them
fantastic
is a gate back
to living in the ordinary —

and if we’re lucky,
we get to go through
after them.

I’m trying to do that myself —
be a world-builder,
a myth-talker,
a fantasy gatekeeper —

and I don’t much like my chances.

 


2.
Dear Mr. Vonnegut:

I read your book.
Couldn’t put it down, in fact,
but I have some questions…
 I’d like to talk to you about it.
Want to hear more about you
and the good, notorious Dr. K;
you and the death chamber;
you and the improbable tunnel
woven from the cloth of dreams;
you and the stories of the back and forth
to speak with the dead —
famous, infamous, and unknown;
you and that bad doctor
retrieving details that otherwise
would have been lost
in transit.  

 

I’m impressed by
all the matters of fact
you built large through the fantasy;
all that time spent in a conjured world
where stories mattered less than stasis
and everything holds still,
where you don’t get to choose
whether you leave
or belong.
 
In the foreword
Neil Gaiman says
that now that you’re over there,
you’re constantly mowing the lawn
in the vacant lot before the Pearly Gates:
thinking of lemonade;
mopping your head;
happy, finally,
stuck in time.

If that’s true, kudos. 

If that’s true, blessings.  

If that’s true,

I’m jealous.

3.
You found no reason 
ever to speak anything but plainly
of the sublime
when seeing plainly the sublime
in the plain,

interviewing those who’d gone ahead
for their views on where they’d ended up;

speaking of the scientist 
who researched babies and mothering
who has now learned that babies who die in infancy
grow up to be angels.
She’s exclaiming
“that’s where angels come from;”

or of the man dead of a heart attack
while defending his schnauzer
from a pit bull.
When you asked if his death was senseless
he replied that it made more sense
than any reckless death in Vietnam.

You spoke of Birnum Birnum,

who fought for Australian citizenship
for himself and his aboriginal brothers,
spoke of how he was led into heaven
by Louis Armstrong
fronting a hot Tasmanian band,

and of a gardener who died in his garden,

whose first act on getting to Heaven
was to pick a flower he’d never seen before,
and then to say that his only regret was that
everyone was not  
as happy as he.

Then there were the famous, like John Brown
with his red eyes glowing, raging against the government,
saying that the slavery legal under US law was just as evil
as the Holocaust, permitted under German law, was still evil;

Adolf Hitler,
saying about his crimes “I beg your pardon”
and insisting that he’d paid his dues
to get to where he’d gotten;

James Earl Ray,
still fuming about how his shot
had elevated his target to sainthood;

Isaac Newton, pissed as all hell
at having been trumped by Einstein.

Damn.

That’s just a sampling
and it’s still a lot to chew on —
but Kurt, you left one question open: 
why
are the famous so angry at unfulfilled wishes,
while the ordinary fall into contentment
upon exiting the Blue Tunnel?

In other words, what the heck
IS going on?

All I want to be is famous, and to strive,
and to accomplish.  So much so that death
is a cheat I‘ve been willing to make
if it’ll get me there,
and here you are saying
it’s not worth my trouble.

Seriously? 

Seriously?

What the heck is going on?

3.
I sit for a while with this little book. 

Everything is beautiful.
Nothing hurts.

Kurt, you carved that shit in stone.

There are things, I guess,
worth casually uncovering,
letting them come in their own time:

love,
the joy of quiet,
the scent of the grass in the rain
after cutting.  An arm around my neck
when I need it most.
A little joy in wordplay,
a little satisfaction in knowing
someone got what I was trying to say.

Kurt, you say
you got off light.
Light
is all I get off you,
and by the light of you
I can see I have work to do.

4.

Listen:

one last thing —
you ended some of these little stories
with a “ta-ta”
and a “goo-goo”
and a “ga-ga.”

Listen:

I appreciate the babying.
The easy farewell.
The wink over the shoulder
on your way to the Exit.

I just wanted to say
that when I get there,

I’ll take over that mower for a spell
if you want.  When you get off
light, you ought to
give a little back.

Till then:
I’ve got more to do here,
at least for a bit.
I’m just getting started —
goo-goo.
I’m not even close —
ga-ga.

Till then, Kurt,
so it goes.
Ta-ta.

Yours,
T.


Activism

tuesday’s struggle
forgotten by thursday
sunday at the latest
if it makes the sermon

the monday after
smiles, everyone
smiles
fantasy island awaits

if there is
grotesquerie 
rampant in the land
we’ll even laugh

and fulfill instants
of our fondest hopes
until the next discrete challenge
rears up

if we were honest
with ourselves
all would be wails
and frowns

but a little bread
a little circus
a little zombie
a couple of dancing stars

and substitute vampires
we’ll bare our teeth
with them
smiles everyone

the dead men in their excellent
tropical weight suits and
magical fulfillments
command us from childhood to smile 


hashtags n memes

epic fail
no 1 knowz how 2 read

thts not tru
teh revolutionz just nds less space
these dayz

fk em if thy cnt take a joke
teh revolutionz likes to lol
kill yr. idolz if thy r not lol
if thy cant dance

thy r going omg crzy
bcuz
this war nds fewr vowels
or complt wordz
dont need em

if we r to survive
we must haz cheezburger
hashtags n memes
we must spel differently
keep r idols off balance
keep noyz down
keep it short n sweet

dont need more thn enuff
to be in touch
and nderstand
each other

kthx